Wednesday, September 9, 2009

Hawk Mountain Celebrates 75th Anniversary On September 12

This year the world's first refuge for birds of prey, Hawk Mountain Sanctuary near Kempton, Berks County, will celebrate its 75th anniversary
The Sanctuary started during the Great Depression when an amateur ornithologist by the name of Richard Pough, offered a dramatic and compelling experience for birdwatchers, hikers and nature lovers.
In 1929 the Game Commission placed a $5 price tag on the goshawk's head—a grand sum in Depression years. Two years later, while Pough was a recent college graduate living in Philadelphia, he became one of a growing number of conservationists opposed to the widespread movement to eradicate wildlife predators, including predatory birds.
Pough heard of the place locals called "Hawk Mountain" and decided to visit. There he saw gunners stationed, shooting hundreds of passing hawks for sport. He returned to gather the carcasses lying on the forest floor and take photographs. Pough unsuccessfully tried to stop the shooting himself, but his photographs were eventually seen by a national conservation activist New Yorker Rosalie Edge.
In 1934, Mrs. Edge came to Hawk Mountain and leased 1,400 acres. She installed a warden on the property, a New England bird enthusiast named Maurice Broun, and Maurice's wife and bird conservation partner, Irma Broun.
The shooting stopped immediately and the next year, Mrs. Edge opened the Sanctuary to the public as a place to see the beautiful, but persecuted birds of prey. She purchased and deeded the 1,400 acres to Hawk Mountain Sanctuary Association, incorporated in 1938 as a non-profit organization in Pennsylvania.
During the Fall migration season, it is not unusual to see more than 25,000 hawks and other birds of prey safely migrated passed Hawk Mountain. And now is the best time to go.
Click here for schedule of 75th Anniversary events.

Video Blog: Hawk Mountain Offers Unique Experience

Spotlight - Let's Be Smart About Developing Our Natural Gas Resources

By Matthew Royer, Chesapeake Bay Foundation

Pennsylvanians value the Commonwealth’s abundant natural beauty and resources, its forests and rivers and streams. We have a constitutional right to clean air and clean water. This is Penn’s Woods, with a model state public lands system, developed and fought for by conservation giants like Gifford Pinchot and Dr. Maurice Goddard.
But all of this hangs in the balance as the Governor and legislators, influenced by one million dollars of industry lobbying, talk of giving up on a natural gas severance tax in favor of more Marcellus shale drilling on our State Forest lands.
Let me tell you what will happen if this comes to pass. Let me tell you what is happening today, on those State Forest lands where drilling is already taking place.
Yesterday, the Chesapeake Bay Foundation filed a legal challenge to erosion and sediment control permits issued by the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection for drilling activities on Tioga State Forest. This is just one of several challenges we have filed because DEP is not doing its job to make sure our State Forests and other stream and wetland resources are protected from the environmental impacts of drilling.
In April, without any public notice, DEP stripped County Conservation Districts of their authority to review and approve erosion and sediment control and wetlands permits. In the same fell swoop, and again without public notice, DEP instituted an expedited erosion control and stormwater permitting process that does not allow for public participation or meaningful agency review of permit applications.
Instead of protecting the environment, DEP is rubber stamping permit applications without any formal review. DEP’s permit review process consists of simply making sure all the paperwork is in the permit application. Unbelievably, they are not conducting any environmental review of the plans that drilling companies are required to submit in order to minimize environmental impacts. Pennsylvania’s precious water resources—our rivers, streams, and wetlands—are at risk due to the lack of thorough DEP oversight.
In the most recent legal action, CBF is challenging permits issued to Fortuna Energy, Inc. authorizing earth disturbance for substantial drilling operations in Tioga State Forest in Ward Township, Tioga County.
This spring, prior to being stripped of its authority, the Tioga County Conservation District issued the first permit to Fortuna for these operations, authorizing 8 acres of earth disturbance to build one well pad.
The Conservation District conducted a thorough technical review of the plans, requiring changes to the plans to make sure that the erosion and sediment control devices would work properly and be most protective of streams. The Conservation District required the drilling company to conduct a wetlands survey to make sure no wetlands were being impacted. It required the company to address post-construction stormwater runoff, which can pollute streams.
Since the initial permit issuance, DEP stripped all Conservation Districts statewide of their review authority on these kinds of projects, and instituted its fast track permit process. Over an eleven week period from June through August, the drilling company submitted permit applications for thirteen amendments to authorize more earth disturbance in the State Forest, for more well pads, impoundments, and pipelines.
All told, the amendments authorize over 105 additional acres of disturbance, a thirteen-fold increase in the amount of forest land cleared.
DEP did not conduct a technical review of any of the thirteen permit applications it received. And, it did not conduct an analysis of the cumulative impacts that these multiple earth disturbances would have on local streams and forests.
With the exception of one amendment for a seven acre pipeline extension, no wetlands surveys, necessary to determine potential damage to wetlands, were submitted to DEP for its review. None of the thirteen amendments contained any analysis of the rate or volume of stormwater runoff from the construction. Yet DEP approved every single amendment request, some as quickly as within four business days of first receiving the application.
That these permits were issued without technical review and an analysis of the damage caused by construction and post-construction runoff violates both the federal Clean Water Act and Pennsylvania law.
Simply put, our state environmental protection agency is not doing what it needs to do to protect our environment. And this is not just any piece of property—this is one of our State Forests, which are held in the public trust for the enjoyment of all Pennsylvanians.
We are greatly concerned that, if the severance tax is scrapped in favor of opening up more State Forest lands to drilling, and DEP’s current policy of rubber stamping permits continues, the industry will be left to run rough shod over our State Forests, without contributing anything financially to help mitigate the environmental and local community impacts from drilling.
Ironically, DEP announced just yesterday that, after over a century of being literally dead from the impacts of coal mining, another Tioga County stream, Babb Creek, may finally be healthy enough to be removed from the state’s list of impaired waters. It took two decades of hard work, multiple partners, and $7 million dollars to clean up this one stream.
This time, we need to be wiser in the development of our energy resources. We need to learn from the lessons of the past. We cannot afford to leave our children with another costly legacy of environmental damage.
That is not what Pennsylvanians want. Governor Rendell needs to rethink recent statements and stand up to Republican legislators in budget negotiations on this issue. He needs to put the severance tax back on the table, and keep our State Forest Lands off limits to wholesale drilling.

For more information visit the Chesapeake Bay Foundation/PA webpage.

CBF, PennFuture Call For End Of Rubber Stamping Marcellus Shale Permits By DEP, Adoption of Severance Tax

Jan Jarrett, president and CEO of Citizens for Pennsylvania’s Future and Matthew Royer, attorney for the Chesapeake Bay Foundation, this week called on the General Assembly and Gov. Rendell to raise money for environmental programs by adopting a severance tax on natural gas production and to abandoned alternative plans to lease vast areas of public lands to drill for gas in the Marcellus Shale formation.
The groups also called for an end to the "rubber stamping" of natural gas permits by the Department of Environmental Protection.
Their remarks came one day after the Chesapeake Bay Foundation filed a legal challenge to erosion and sediment control permits issued by the Department of Environmental Protection for drilling activities on Tioga State Forest.
“This is just one of several a legal challenges we have filed because DEP is not doing its job to make sure our State Forests and other stream and wetland resources are protected from the environmental impacts of drilling,” said Royer. “Instead of protecting the environment, DEP is rubber stamping permit applications without any formal review. DEP’s permit review process consists of simply making sure all the paperwork is in the permit application. Unbelievably, they are not conducting any environmental review of the plans that drilling companies are required to submit in order to minimize environmental impacts. Pennsylvania’s precious water resources—our rivers, streams, and wetlands—are at risk due to the lack of thorough DEP oversight.
“We are greatly concerned that, if the severance tax is scrapped in favor of opening up more State Forest lands to drilling, and DEP’s current policy of rubber stamping permits continues, the industry will be left to run rough shod over our State Forests, without contributing anything financially to help mitigate the environmental and local community impacts from drilling,” said Royer.
Click here for Royer's full statement.
“Abandoning the severance tax on natural gas and immediately opening up hundreds of thousands of acres of state land to gas drillers is a giveaway to multi-national energy corporations directly at the expense of Pennsylvania taxpayers,” said Jan Jarrett. “The deal that Senate Republicans and blue dog Democrats want to take on behalf of Pennsylvania taxpayers to balance this year’s budget is to let the energy corporations off the hook for a severance tax and allow them to lock up leases on state land at a time when they can pick leases up for bargain basement prices.
Last week Gov. Rendell said the natural gas severance tax was off the table in the current budget negotiations, but House and Senate Democrats said they still favored the idea.
“If Pennsylvania does not assess a severance tax we are allowing the industry to foist the costs of drilling onto taxpayers – wear and tear on local roads, the costs of environmental regulation and oversight, damage to natural resources, strains on policing and emergency services. That’s an insult to Pennsylvania taxpayers,” continued Jarrett.
“The industry is selling the line that leasing will bring in $280 million a year over the next 3 years if it gets access to 390,000 acres of public land. There’s no evidence to support that estimate. But our elected officials are falling for that line like an Internet newbie falling for a Nigerian email scam,” said Jarrett.
“Thoughtful legislators should vigorously oppose this deal solely on the grounds that it cheats Pennsylvania taxpayers out of reasonable payment for the exploitation of a public resource, and it’s a sweetheart giveaway to giant energy corporations. This is no way to balance Pennsylvania’s budget,” concluded Jarrett.

Wednesday NewsClips

More Prayer Than Progress On Day 70 With Budget
Returning Director Hopes To Boost Recycling Efforts
Energy Industry Has Biofuels Hero
State Court To Hear Case Over Natural Gas Royalty Payment Violations
Woodward Man Almost Off The Grid
Athens School District Recognized For Energy Saving Efforts
Gas Drilling Causing Increase In Crime
Wind Turbine, Solar Panel At Hughesville High
Less Water Shed
Editorial: Focus Energy On Fueling Future
Potassium Iodide Tablets Still Available
State Panel Proposing Changes To Stormwater Rules

Tuesday, September 8, 2009

State Now Accepting Applications For Renewable Energy Heat, Power Projects

The state is now accepting applications for $11 million in federal stimulus funds for combined heat and power projects which generate power and thermal energy from a single source, the first of several application periods to open under the Green Energy Works! Program.
Applications are due October 9.
All projects must create jobs, be able to start work within six months, and be completed within 24 months and before April 30, 2012.
Green Energy Works! will eventually provide a total of $52 million to Pennsylvania for projects to help increase energy efficiency, reduce reliance on foreign energy sources, improve service reliability, and reduce the impact of energy production on the environment. It will also fund future solar, wind and biogas projects.
Green Energy Works! is part of the federal funding that Pennsylvania will receive under the Recovery Act’s State Energy Program that will invest more than $99.6 million of federal funding to supplement the state’s Alternative Energy Investment Fund. That money is being used to provide loans, grants and tax credits for energy efficiency and conservation projects for homes and small businesses.
Guidelines for the program are available online.
Applications must be submitted via the online Environmental eGrants system.

Stormwater Management Symposium October 14-15

Engineers, planners, water resource professionals, government representatives, land development professionals, and watershed and conservation groups are encouraged to attend the 2009 Pennsylvania Stormwater Management Symposium to be held October 14-15 at Villanova University.
The purpose of the symposium is to advance the knowledge and understanding of sustainable stormwater management for those dealing in all aspects of planning, design, implementation and regulatory compliance. A workshop for non-engineers will be held in conjunction with the symposium. This is the seventh symposium on stormwater issues that has been held at Villanova.
DEP Deputy Secretary for Water Management John Hines and DEP’s Director of the Bureau of Watershed Management Glenn Rider will address the symposium in addition to speakers from both the private and the public sector.
In addition to the symposium, a municipal workshop will be held for local government representatives that features practical information and strategies for dealing with stormwater runoff. Subjects include stormwater fundamentals, a look at inspection and infiltration testing, and runoff controls and maintenance.
For more information and to register, visit the Stormwater Symposium webpage.

DEP Asks To Have Babb Creek Removed From Impaired Streams List

Environmental Protection Secretary John Hanger today announced that DEP has petitioned to have Babb Creek in Tioga County removed from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's list of impaired streams, culminating two decades of work to restore a stream that had been dead for more than a century.
Babb Creek winds through some of the most remote country in northern Pennsylvania, emptying into the Pine Creek in Blackwell, just below the Pine Creek Gorge. Extensive underground and surface coal mining that began around the time of the Civil War fouled the stream, making 14 miles of Babb Creek inhospitable to fish and aquatic life and severely degrading a five-mile stretch of the Pine Creek.
"This is a significant milestone for our continuing efforts to heal the scars left behind by the unregulated mining practices of the past," Hanger said. "We have turned a lifeless stream into a thriving sport fishery and improved downstream water quality in the Pine Creek, which further enhances the recreational and economic opportunities for the entire Pennsylvania Wilds region."
Efforts to restore Babb Creek began in 1990 with construction of a diversion well - an experimental new mine drainage treatment technology - at Lick Run by the Babb Creek Watershed Association with technical assistance from DEP and volunteer labor from the Arnot Sportsmen, the National Guard and the Department of Conservation and Natural Resources.
Shortly thereafter, a large mine drainage treatment system was constructed at the Antrim #1 mine. A legal settlement required Antrim Mining Co. to construct the facility, and directed money from a tipping fee levied by an associated landfill to reclamation efforts for the Babb Creek.
A host of agencies and organizations including the Babb Creek Watershed Association, the Arnot Sportsmen, the Foundation for Pennsylvania Watersheds, Trout Unlimited, DEP, EPA, the U.S. Office of Surface Mining, the DCNR, the state Fish and Boat Commission and the coal industry have undertaken 16 different projects totaling $7 million to restore the stream.
DEP has awarded 11 grants totaling $4.6 million to the Babb Creek Watershed Association including a $428,710 Energy Harvest grant in January of this year to construct a 53 kilowatt microhydro turbine that will be powered by the 1,800 gallon per minute Antrim discharge and will in turn provide electricity to run the mine drainage treatment facility. The excess electricity will be sold, generating approximately $17,000 annually.
Trout Unlimited and the Babb Creek Watershed Association will celebrate the reclamation of the creek with a ceremony and tour of the treatment systems on Saturday, Sept. 12. For more information, click here or contact Rebecca Dunlap of Trout Unlimited at 570-748-4901, or by e-mail at rdunlap@tu.org.

Tuesday NewsClips

Editorial: Budget, It's All About Game Itself
Editorial: Marcellus Natural Gas Tax A Must
Editorial: Taxing Shale Gas Should Lead To Budget Compromise
Editorial: Thumbs Up, Thumbs Down On Budget
Editorial: Marcellus Shale Tax Compromise Not Best
Ohiopyle Borough Stormwater Upgrades Planned
Chesapeake Bay Cleanup Will Cost Williamsport Two Businesses
Natural Gas Favor for Producing Electricity
Study Focusing On Diesel Exhaust Teams With Schools
Community Cleanup Day Turns Into Wild Art In Park
500 Ton Generators To Begin Journey To TMI Soon
Solar Farm Would Benefit Dauphin County

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